Thanks, Darryll. By all accounts, it was a great quarter for TSS. Let's jump into it. Consolidated revenues for the third quarter of this year was $70.1 million, almost 8x to $8.9 million total revenues reported this quarter of last year. This is also a substantial increase in sequential results up from $12.2 million in the second quarter of 2024. The increase was driven in large part by growth in our lower margin procurement services business, as well as growth in our higher margin systems integration business. Revenue this period grew in all major product lines compared to this quarter last year. Our segment reporting looks a little different this quarter than it did last quarter. Beginning in the third quarter, we are breaking out our systems integration and facilities management revenues in a bit more detail to increase the transparency and give investors a clearer picture of the drivers of our business. Particularly within the Systems Integration segment, we are providing a bit more detail to understand the portion of growth driven by the procurement activities versus systems integration activities. And in the MD&A section of the 10-Q filed earlier this afternoon, you'll find a tabular presentation of the procurement activities in particular in a bit more detail. Not only the revenues, but cost of goods, gross profits, and gross margins for each of those components of the Systems Integration segment. Total revenue from the Systems Integration segment increased from $7.1 million in the prior year quarter to $68.1 million in the current quarter. Current quarter segment revenues are comprised of $7.6 million from integration services and $60.5 million from procurement services. The integration services revenues of $7.6 million represents growth of 361% compared to $1.7 million in the year-ago quarter. The growth was driven by an increase in the AI-enabled rack integrations, which began late in the second quarter. Demand for this business is robust and the recently signed multi-year agreement mentioned by Darryll to provide these services greatly reduces the effect of fluctuating demand or supply chain issues that are inherent in this business, allowing us to maintain the facility and staffing levels to quickly serve our customer's needs, enhancing our flexibility and ability to delight our customer. Revenue from facility management totaled $2 million compared to $1.8 million in the same quarter last year, up 8% year-over-year. As Darryll mentioned, this is generally a fairly predictable revenue stream with gross profit margins, generally above 50%, though that was down slightly this quarter. We see the potential for more robust growth in this segment in 12 to 18 months as more medium and large enterprise clients consider using modular data centers as a cost efficient means to harness the power of AI technology without the need to build out full data centers with all the requisite cooling capacity. Revenue from procurement services totaled $60.5 million up more than 1000% compared to $5.4 million in a year-ago quarter. Recognized procurement revenues and related costs as well as the resulting gross margin percentage based on recorded values can be heavily influenced by whether we transform the product. If we do something to transform the product, we report the gross value of the transaction along with the gross costs of those goods called gross deals, often resulting in recognized gross margins as low as 3% to 4%. If we merely act as an agent in buying and selling the product, we record our revenue as an agency fee called net deals resulting in a 100% margin. In periods where we have an increase in the proportion of procurement activities that are gross deals versus net deals, it tends to inflate our gross revenues and costs and decrease the recognized gross margin percentage and vice versa without much impact, if any on the gross profit dollars recorded. This in turn can also have an impact on the company's blended gross margin percentages based on recorded values as the procurement business has much lower margins than the remainder of our business. Increases in the recorded amount of gross procurement activities will have a downward effect on the company's overall margin percentages reported. In the third quarter of 2024, the majority of procurement activities were gross deals, and in the comparable prior year quarter, the majority were net deals. As a result, the procurement gross margin percentage based on recorded U.S. GAAP values was 6.1% in the current quarter versus 30.4% in the prior year quarter, while the gross profit dollars increased to 125% from $1.7 million to $3.7 million. In analyzing what I consider the true economics of our procurement activities, while it's non-GAAP, I find it most useful for me to look at the gross revenues and gross costs of procurement activities regardless of whether they were recorded as gross or net deals. On that basis, our gross revenues were up 94% from $41 million in the prior year quarter to $79.6 million in the quarter ended September 30, 2024. Gross profits increased from $1.7 million to $3.7 million, just like the GAAP figures. And the resulting gross margin percentages based on these gross values improved from 4% in the prior year quarter to 4.7% in the current quarter. On this same basis, year-to-date gross procurement revenues increased 33% from $90.5 million in the prior year-to-date period to $120.6 million in the current year-to-date period with gross margins on that basis improving from 3.9% to 4.4%. As we continue to scale and grow, the mix of our revenues will likely drive quarter-to-quarter fluctuations in our gross margins. The overall gross margin for the entire company was 11.3% this quarter compared to 31.9% in the Q3 of 2023. This decrease is primarily due to the dramatic increase in revenues from our lower margin procurement services business combined with a greater portion of those sales being recorded as gross deals. This business line while lower in margin, serves as a conduit to providing some higher value add higher margin integration services. And it contributes nicely to the bottom line all by itself. Individual customer engagements in this business may be much larger than our typical integration or facilities management engagements. While procurement revenues remain, it may remain at elevated levels for the next three to six months in comparison to historical trend, we don't currently expect them to be at quite the same level that we saw this quarter. As much of our procurement activity is ultimately related to Federal Government buying, we believe this can contribute to some seasonality in these revenues. As the Federal Government budget ends on September 30th each year, we believe this may generally lead to an increase in procurement revenues in the quarter ending September 30, and again in the quarter ending December 31st each year as Federal Agencies receive their budgets for the new fiscal year. Because revenues can be heavily impacted by gross versus net procurement deals, even without any difference in economic reality, I prefer to view our consolidated costs as a percentage of gross profit rather than percentage of revenues, which is generally the same regardless of – the gross profits are generally the same regardless of how procurement activity is recorded and therefore more comparable between periods. SG&A expenses improved as a percentage of gross profit to 49% in the third quarter of 2024, down from 72% in the year-ago quarter. On a dollar basis, SG&A expenses increased to $3.9 million in the third quarter of 2024 up from $2 million in the year-ago quarter. Our SG&A costs have increased as we've invested in people, capacity and processes. The current quarter SG&A expenses also include some larger than normal accruals for commissions and other incentive compensation driven by the outsized operating results. Through the use of well-designed incentive compensation plans, we believe we can reward and encourage outstanding performance by our staff like we saw this quarter while automatically scaling back costs in periods with results that may not be as robust. Operating profit margin in the third quarter of 2024 was $3.8 million and 48% of gross profit respectively compared to $0.7 million and 25% in Q3 of 2023. Calculated as a percentage of recorded total revenue rather than gross profits, our operating income margin was 5.4% in the current quarter compared to 8.1% in the prior year quarter. This was largely driven by the large increase in gross procurement deals discussed earlier. During the quarter, we had net interest expense of $1.1 million. This was comprised of $1.3 million of interest expense tied to factoring the receivables from our largest customer, mostly related to procurement activity, partially offset by $0.2 million of interest income earned from cash on hand. This compares to net interest expense of $0.5 million in Q3 2023 comprised of $661,000 of interest expense partially offset by $179,000 of interest income on bank deposits. Combining the impact of all these items, net income for the third quarter of 2024 was $2.6 million more than 11x to $209,000 net income in Q3 of 2023. Earnings per diluted share was $0.10 for the third quarter of 2024 up from just a $0.01 in the third quarter of last year. Adjusted EBITDA, which excludes interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and stock-based compensation, was $4.3 million up from $0.9 million in the year-ago quarter. Turning to the year-to-date results for a second. For the nine months ended September 30, 2024, total revenues were up 227% to $98.1 million compared to $30 million in the year-ago period. Gross profit for the first nine months of 2024 increased 96% to $15.1 million, and our SG&A costs improved to 59% of gross profit down from 84% year-to-date 2023. Year-to-date our net income was $4.1 million compared to a net loss of $262,000 in the 2023 year-to-date period and diluted EPS improved from a $0.01 loss to $0.16 in the current period. Turning to our balance sheet. As of September 30, 2024, we had cash and cash equivalents and short-term deposits totaling $46.4 million. And again, the end of the period debt free. The cash balance is somewhat inflated as we get paid almost immediately for billings to our largest customer through a financing program they have in place whereas we typically get 30 to 45-day terms to pay our vendors. In periods such as the current quarter, when procurement activities are unusually large, we carry a larger than normal cash balance. We estimate that after removing the float we enjoy by receiving payments on factored receivables prior to needing to pay our vendors, the remaining unrestricted cash balance available to fund daily operations or invest for growth is currently about $10.6 million. For the first nine months of 2024, we generated cash flow from operations of $36.9 million, including the timing benefit from procurement activities compared to $8.6 million in the first nine months of 2023. Net working capital, which nets out temporary fluctuations due to timing of payments to vendors and receipts from customers increased from $893,000 at the beginning of this year to $4.3 million at the end of September 2024. As Darryll mentioned, while we have not yet finalized the lease agreement and there's always risk until it's completed, we've had very productive discussions with our bank to finance the majority of the $25 million to $30 million we plan to invest in our new facility with an eye to aligning debt service payments with revenues from our AI rack building activities. Although other banks have expressed strong interest in financing this need, we believe we'll be successful in putting in place a facility with our existing bank with repayment terms that include a fully amortizing term loan. All-in-all, it was another great quarter financially. While we are not providing specific financial guidance at this time, based on our current visibility, we expect profitability in the fourth quarter to be slightly below the third quarter level due to the timing of incoming projects and a smaller pipeline of procurement deals in Q4 compared to Q3. The additional contribution from procurement deals is nice when they spike, but with limited overhead, direct labor or square footage dedicated to these activities, we don't need to cover significant costs in periods with lighter procurement activities. We expect the first half of 2025 to be in line with our second and third quarters of 2024 in aggregate. With that, I'll turn the call back over to Darryll to share some insights into our expectations for the future and provide some closing remarks and Q&A. Darryll?